The Estates of Scotland met at Scone (April 11, 1286) and swore loyalty
to their child queen, “the Maid of Norway,” granddaughter
of Alexander III. Six guardians of the kingdom were appointed
on April 11, 1286. They were the Bishops of St Andrews and Glasgow,
two Comyns (Buchan and Badenoch), the Earl of Fife, and Lord James,
the Steward of Scotland. No Bruce or Baliol was among the Custodians.
Instantly a “band,” or covenant, was made by the Bruces,
Earls of Annandale and Carrick, to support their claims (failing the
Maid) to the throne; and there were acts of war on their part against
another probable candidate, John Balliol. Edward (like Henry VIII.
in the case of Mary Stuart) moved for the marriage of the infant queen
to his son. A Treaty safeguarding all Scottish liberties as against
England was made by clerical influences at Birgham (July 18, 1290),
but by October 7 news of the death of the young queen reached Scotland:
she had perished during her voyage from Norway. Private war now
broke out between the Bruces and Balliols; and the party of Balliol
appealed to Edward, through Fraser, Bishop of St Andrews, asking the
English king to prevent civil war, and recommending Balliol as a person
to be carefully treated. Next the Seven Earls, alleging some dim
elective right, recommended Bruce, and appealed to Edward as their legal
superior.
Edward came to Norham-on-Tweed in May 1291, proclaimed himself Lord
Paramount, and was accepted as such by the twelve candidates for the
Crown (June 3). The great nobles thus, to serve their ambitions,
betrayed their country: the communitas (whatever that term may
here mean) made a futile protest.
As lord among his vassals, Edward heard the pleadings and evidence
in autumn 1292; and out of the descendants, in the female line, of David
Earl of Huntingdon, youngest son of David I., he finally (November 17,
1292) preferred John Balliol (great-grandson of the earl through
his eldest daughter) to Bruce the Old, grandfather of the famous Robert
Bruce, and grandson of Earl David's second daughter.
The decision, according to our ideas, was just; no modern court could
set it aside. But Balliol was an unpopular weakling-“an
empty tabard,” the people said-and Edward at once subjected
him, king as he was, to all the humiliations of a petty vassal.
He was summoned into his Lord's Court on the score of the bills
of tradesmen. If Edward's deliberate policy was to goad
Balliol into resistance and then conquer Scotland absolutely, in the
first of these aims he succeeded.
In 1294 Balliol was summoned, with his Peers, to attend Edward in
Gascony. Balliol, by advice of a council (1295), sought a French
alliance and a French marriage for his son, named Edward; he gave the
Annandale lands of his enemy Robert Bruce (father of the king to be)
to Comyn, Earl of Buchan. He besieged Carlisle, while Edward took
Berwick, massacred the people, and captured Sir William Douglas, father
of the good Lord James.
In the war which followed, Edward broke down resistance by a sanguinary
victory at Dunbar, captured John Comyn of Badenoch (the Red Comyn),
received from Balliol (July 7, 1296) the surrender of his royal claims,
and took the oaths of the Steward of Scotland and the Bruces, father
and son. He carried to Westminster the Black Rood of St Margaret
and the famous stone of Scone, a relic of the early Irish dynasty of
the Scots; as far north as Elgin he rode, receiving the oaths of all
persons of note and influence-except William Wallace. His
name does not appear in the list of submissions called “The Ragman's
Roll.” Between April and October 1296 the country was subjugated;
the castles were garrisoned by Englishmen. But by January 1297,
Edward's governor, Warenne, Earl of Surrey, and Ormsby, his Chief
Justice, found the country in an uproar, and at midsummer 1297 the levies
of the northern counties of England were ordered to put down the disorders.
The year of Wallace.
In May the commune of Scotland (whatever the term may here
mean) had chosen Wallace as their leader; probably this younger son
of Sir Malcolm Wallace of Elderslie, in Renfrewshire, had already been
distinguished for his success in skirmishes against the English, as
well as for strength and courage. The popular account of his early adventures given in the poem by Blind
Harry (1490?) is of no historical value. His men destroyed the
English at Lanark (May 1297); he was abetted by Wishart, Bishop of Glasgow,
and the Steward; but by July 7, Percy and Clifford, leading the English
army, admitted the Steward, Robert Bruce (the future king), and Wishart
to the English peace at Irvine in Ayrshire. But the North was
up under Sir Andrew Murray, and “that thief Wallace” (to
quote an English contemporary) left the siege of Dundee Castle which
he was conducting to face Warenne on the north bank of the Forth.
On September 11, the English, under Warenne, manœuvred vaguely
at Stirling Bridge, and were caught on the flank by Wallace's
army before they could deploy on the northern side of the river.
They were cut to pieces, Cressingham was slain, and Warenne galloped
to Berwick, while the Scots harried Northumberland with great ferocity,
which Wallace seems to have been willing but not often able to control.
By the end of March 1298 he appears with Andrew Murray as Guardian of
the Kingdom for the exiled Balliol. This attitude must have aroused
the jealousy of the nobles, and especially of Robert Bruce, who aimed
at securing the crown, and who, after several changes of side, by June
1298 was busy in Edward's service in Galloway.
Edward then crossed the Border with a great army of perhaps 40,000
men, met the spearmen of Wallace in their serried phalanxes at Falkirk,
broke the “schiltrom” or clump of spears by the arrows of
his archers; slaughtered the archers of Ettrick Forest; scattered the
mounted nobles, and avenged the rout of Stirling (July 22, 1298).
The country remained unsubdued, but its leaders were at odds among themselves,
and Wallace had retired to France, probably to ask for aid; he may also
conceivably have visited Rome. The Bishop of St Andrews, Lamberton,
with Bruce and the Red Comyn-deadly rivals-were Guardians
of the Kingdom in 1299. But in June 1300, Edward, undeterred by
remonstrances from the Pope, entered Scotland; an armistice, however,
was accorded to the Holy Father, and the war, in which the Scots scored
a victory at Roslin in February 1293, dragged on from summer to summer
till July 1304. In these years Bruce alternately served Edward
and conspired against him; the intricacies of his perfidy are deplorable.
Bruce served Edward during the siege of Stirling, then the central
key of the country. On its surrender Edward admitted all men to
his peace, on condition of oaths of fealty, except “Messire Williame
le Waleys.” Men of the noblest Scottish names stooped to
pursue the hero: he was taken near Glasgow, and handed over to Sir John
Menteith, a Stewart, and son of the Earl of Menteith. As Sheriff
of Dumbartonshire, Menteith had no choice but to send the hero in bonds
to England. But, if Menteith desired to escape the disgrace with
which tradition brands his name, he ought to have refused the English
blood-price for the capture of Wallace. He made no such refusal.
As an outlaw, Wallace was hanged at London; his limbs, like those of
the great Montrose, were impaled on the gates of various towns.
What we really know about the chief popular hero of his country,
from documents and chronicles, is fragmentary; and it is hard to find
anything trustworthy in Blind Harry's rhyming “Wallace”
(1490), plagiarised as it is from Barbour's earlier poem (1370)
on Bruce. But Wallace was truly brave, disinterested, and indomitable. Alone
among the leaders he never turned his coat, never swore and broke oaths
to Edward. He arises from obscurity, like Jeanne d'Arc;
like her, he is greatly victorious; like her, he awakens a whole people;
like her, he is deserted, and is unlawfully put to death; while his
limbs, like her ashes, are scattered by the English. The ravens
had not pyked his bones bare before the Scots were up again for freedom.